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Dr. Margaret Bauman, M.D.

  • Pediatric Neurologist

  • Associate Professor of Pathology - Department of Anatomy and Neurobiology - Boston University School of Medicine

  • Awarded "Lifetime Achievement Award" by the International Society for Autism Research Editor: "The Neurobiology of Autism"

  • Autism Think Tank Advisor

Dr. Margaret Bauman, M.D. is an Associate Professor of Pathology in the Department of Anatomy and Neurobiology at Boston University School of Medicine.  She is a former Associate Professor of Neurology at Harvard Medical School. Dr. Bauman is a practicing Pediatrician and Neurologist at Integrative Center for Child Development, formerly Massachusetts General Hospital (MGH).  She is a Lurie Marks Distinguished Scholar at MGH, and a Founding Director of LADDERS (Learning and Developmental Disabilities Evaluation and Rehabilitation Service), now known as the Lurie Center, which is a satellite multidisciplinary clinic of the Massachusetts General Hospital for Children. Dr. Bauman is a Medical and Neurology Consultant to the Giant Steps Connecticut School in Southport, CT. She is the Founder and Director of The Autism Research Foundation in Boston, MA. She is a Child Neurology Consultant and Medical Director for the Children’s Services Center at Casa Colina Centers for Rehabilitation, Inc, in Pomona, California.

Dr. Bauman is part of the medical Staff at the University of California at Irvine. She is a founder and Chair of the Autism Research Consortium (ARC). Dr. Bauman was a Medical Director of the Autism Treatment Network (ATN). Her research interests include the study of the microscopic brain structure in autism, Rett syndrome, and other disorders of neurological development. Dr. Bauman is co-editor of the book, “The Neurobiology of Autism” which was originally published in 1994 by Johns Hopkins University Press. The second edition of this book was released in January 2005. She also co-author of the book entitled, “Your Successful Preschooler” published by Harvard University Press in 2011.

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